Solange, who has famously embraced her natural hair since 2009, appears on the latest cover of Evening Standard with her blonde hair in thin braids.

It turns out, however, that there was something missing from the picture.

On Thursday, the Grammy Award-winning singer posted the original image from the photoshoot, which shows a large crown of braided hair behind her head that was edited out of the final cover.

"Dtmh @eveningstandardmagazine," Solange captioned the post — a reference to the song "Don't Touch My Hair" from her critically acclaimed album, "A Seat at the Table."

"Don't touch my hair / When it's the feelings I wear," she sings in the song. She continues: "Don't touch my soul / When it's the rhythm I know. Don't touch my crown."

As Teen Vogue pointed out, many of the singer's fans were equally as disappointed. Someone asked Evening Standard, "Why would you edit her lovely hair??" "Can't believe they did that, so disrespectful," another commented. And one person said: "They cut off her crown...how's THAT for microaggression? Smh. Symbolic much?"

Many of Solange's fans have also commented "DTMH" on Evening Standard's Instagram post of the edited cover.

It's certainly a strange move on the magazine's part, which has yet to explain why it chose to alter Solange's hair.

In fact, Solange even talks openly about the significance of her hair in her Evening Standard interview. "[Braiding] is an act of beauty, an act of convenience, and an act of tradition," the singer said. Solange also shared a screenshot of this quote on her Instagram Story, BuzzFeed reported.

The author of Evening Standard's story, Vulture writer Angelica Jade Bastién, also asked the magazine to remove her byline from the piece.

Bastién wrote on Twitter: "I am publicly disowning the Solange piece London Evening Standard published today. The entire piece was a fiasco despite my efforts."

"I told my editors to take my name off of the byline because they distorted my work and reporting in ways that made me very uncomfortable," she continued.

She added: "I don't want this piece attached to my rep as a writer at all. Hopefully disowning it gets that across."